Skip to page content
Sponsored content by Sacramento State

Dancer and entrepreneur empowers young people through arts and media


Dancer and entrepreneur empowers young people through arts and media
Tamaira Sandifer is owner and creative director for Studio T Arts & Entertainment, a Sacramento-based organization that provides social service programming through the arts.

In 2008, Tamaira Sandifer hit rock bottom.

Amid the financial crisis, Sandifer lost the building that housed her dance studio, and nearly lost the business itself.

There were also devastating personal challenges. Her marriage fell apart, and her daughter nearly drowned in the bathtub, leading to a difficult, years-long recovery.

Roughly $600,000 dollars in debt and nearly homeless, she turned to public assistance to get by – and learned that, to qualify, she had to look for employment or go to school.

That moment, Sandifer’s lowest point, ultimately led her to Sacramento State, where she earned her bachelor’s degree and gained the skills needed to rebuild her studio and grow it into something far greater.

Dancer and entrepreneur empowers young people through arts and media

“I came into Sac State just broken, looking for hope, believing that if I could somehow educate myself, I could be better and I could do better,” Sandifer said.

Sandifer is owner and creative director for Studio T Arts & Entertainment, a Sacramento-based organization that provides social service programming through the arts.

At Studio T and through partnerships with local schools and nonprofit organizations, participants, many from underrepresented backgrounds, learn skills in everything from dance to digital media to financial literacy.

Forbes magazine recently included Sandifer on its inaugural For(bes) The Culture 50 Champions list of the “Black and brown leaders making the most impact through their capital, creativity, connections and commitment.” The list includes activist and former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick, and actor, writer, and producer Issa Rae.

As a child, Sandifer didn’t need to “discover” dance or her talent for it, because, she says, it’s “something that we do at home, culturally, in the Black community.”

However, extracurricular activities and organizations were hard to find in the underserved Richmond neighborhood where she grew up, and besides, her family – she was raised by single mother – couldn’t afford them anyway. TV shows “Soul Train” and “Fame,” and music videos on MTV were her dance class, Paula Abdul and Michael Jackson, among others, her instructors. The living room and backyard were her studio. Other neighborhood kids became her students.

“Dance has always been a thread of hope through my whole life.” Sandifer said. “There have been so many challenges I’ve faced in life, and (dance) has always offered me a way to maintain emotional health and keep me connected to the community and the people I want to serve.”

After graduating high school, Sandifer began teaching dance wherever she could in the community. She received a scholarship to a Paula Abdul dance camp, but didn’t have the money to attend. She married, started a family, and in 2000, the family moved to Sacramento to escape Richmond’s high housing prices and crime rates.

In Sacramento, Sandifer worked for a local phone company while continued teaching dance on the side. In 2005, she started her own studio – and realized after an unbearably hot outdoor August practice that she needed an indoor space. She retired early from the phone company, cashed out her 401(k), and bought a half-million dollar building out of which to operate.

Then came the devastation of 2008.

Picking up the pieces from that year, Sandifer enrolled at American River College to study photography, something she had pursued since age 13 to help her aspiring-model sister. Sandifer earned her associates degree then transferred to Sac State. Though she was a nontraditional student – 32 years old and mother of three – it was clear from the moment she stepped onto campus that university staff and faculty were just as invested in her future as she was.

Dancer and entrepreneur empowers young people through arts and media

“I wasn’t just a number in the classroom,” Sandifer said. “I was a person that they really wanted to see succeed.”

Sandifer knew how to dance and how to teach kids to dance, but Sac State was where she learned the essential skills necessary to manage and grow her studio: how to run a business, how to promote events, how to write grants and secure funding, and more.

Studio T, according to its website, serves in person and virtually more than 192,000 people, providing “positive, creative, and social alternatives to drugs, teen pregnancy, gang violence and suicide.”

With the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, Studio T scaled and launched its distance-learning platform, supporting thousands of schools and students nationwide with dance, entrepreneurial training, and family management.

Sandifer maintains her connection with her alma mater, returning frequently to work with the dance department and bringing Sac State students and alumni to the studio to teach.

Jonathan Morales is a senior writer and editor with University Communications at Sacramento State, where he was worked since 2017. He previously worked at San Francisco State University and as a newspaper reporter and editor. He enjoys local beer, Bay Area sports, and spending time outdoors with his family and dog.


Want to stay ahead of who & what is next? The national Inno newsletter is your definitive first-look at the people, companies & ideas shaping and driving the U.S. innovation economy.

Sign Up
)
Presented By